Why Narayana Murthy's return to Infosys isn't so great

Why Narayana Murthy's return to Infosys isn't so great

Narayana Murthy showed that he may be the greatest first-generation business leader of our times but he too is mortal, says Sudhir Bisht.

Who is the most respected first-generation business leader in India?

In case, India decides to have a business icon as its next President, who do you think fits the bill?

Which business leader deserves the highest civilian award of our nation?

In the first week of May 2013, if you had asked one thousand working class men and women the above mentioned questions, the chances are that Narayana Murthy would have been the choice of overwhelming majority of respondents.

Sadly somewhere in the last week of May, Narayana Murthy showed that he may be the greatest first-generation business leader of our times but he too is mortal.

In Mahabharata, we read that the wheels of the chariot of Yudhishtir, the great Pandav prince, were always two feet above the ground level as the great Prince was the embodiment of truth and dharma.

However his chariot was brought to the ground level after he uttered one lie to his Guru. Yudhishtir told his Guru, the great Dhronacharya, “Ashwathama has been killed, but the elephant.”

The last three words, ‘but the elephant’, were deliberately spoken very softly and the Guru didn’t hear them. Thinking that Ashwathama, the Guru’s son was killed, the Guru gave up fighting and in the process was killed by Dhrishtadyumna.

Why Narayana Murthy's return to Infosys isn't so great

By returning to Infosys as Executive Chairman, Narayana Murthy’s chariot has also been brought to the ground level. Just like Yudhishtir lost the morale right to be addressed as “Dharmraj”, Murthy has proved that when it comes to negotiating life without all the trappings of power, he is just like one of us. Lonely, restless and itching back to get back his former corner office!

Murthy’s return has made it all so confusing

When Murthy retired completely from Infosys in August 2011, he said that he had built a strong team to carry forward the company.

Infosys then had one Chairman (KV Kamath), Co-chairman (Kris Gopalakrishnan) and one MD/CEO (SD Shibulal).

With Murthy’s return, KV Kamath has sort of stepped aside (or has he?), Krish Gopalakrishnan has become Vice Chairman (demoted?) and SD Shibulal remains the toddler who needs the support of Murthy and Kris to stabilise.

With one Executive Chairman and one Executive Vice Chairman what is the Managing Director supposed to do?

The strategy will be driven by whom? If by Murthy and Kris, then why not redesignate Shibulal as COO?

Murthy and Kris keep saying that they want to strengthen the hands of Shibulal. What about his morale building?

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Image: An employee walks past a signage board in the Infosys campus at the Electronics City IT district in Bangalore.Photographs: Vivek Prakash/Reuters

Why Narayana Murthy's return to Infosys isn't so great

In conclusion I would like to remind the readers of the great Bob Simpson. This legendary Aussie cricketer retired from Test cricket in 1968 but had to return to lead the Australian cricket team in 1997, after a gap of 9 years.

Austrian test cricket was virtually deserted by all their top cricketers in 1997 as they all signed up with the unofficial cricket body, or rather a circus, called the World Series Cricket.

Simpson returned to test cricket and led a second string Australian team to victory over a full strength Indian team.

Simpson did well with the bat but he excelled in his role of a mature leader who instilled confidence in his young team mates.

Bob Simpson quickly re-retired as test cricketer once the crisis in the Australian cricket team had been resolved.

Hope Murthy would do the same.

Sudhir Bisht is the CEO of CLAIRVOYANT Consultants. He can be reached at sudhir_bisht@rediffmail.com